The Manitoba Confederation of Regions Party was the provincial branch of the
Confederation of Regions Party of Canada, a right-wing organization which sought greater autonomy for
Western Canada. Unlike the
Western Canada Concept and the
Western Independence Party, the CoR did not advocate full independence for the western provinces. The national party leader was
Elmer Knutson; its original provincial leader was Douglas Edmondson. The Manitoba CoR was founded in 1984, as a result of public controversy over
New Democratic Party Premier Howard Pawley's attempts to entrench francophone services in the province. The CoR opposed any expansion of French language rights. The national CoR Party polled surprisingly well in the 1984 federal election in Manitoba, placing second to the
Progressive Conservatives in three rural anglophone ridings. The party, as such, hoped to elect candidates to the
Legislative Assembly of Manitoba in the general election of 1986. The party ran 15 candidates in 1986, and managed to place second in four rural ridings (Arthur, Gladstone, Pembina and Rhineland). None of the CoR's candidates came close to victory;
Dennis Heeney, who had replaced Edmondson as leader, placed third in
Minnedosa. The CoR ran 14 candidates in 1988. Despite a high-profile endorsement of the party from former Premier
Douglas Campbell, no candidate placed higher than a distant third. Dennis Heeney appears to have stepped down as party leader following the election. In 1990, only five candidates ran under the CoR banner. Irene Armishaw was the party's president. Armishaw received the largest number of votes of any of the party's candidates—486 votes in the rural riding of
Lakeside. == Reform Party ==